Skip to comments.
The FReeper Foxhole Remembers the Makin Atoll Raid (08/17-18/1942) - Nov. 13th, 2003
www.chinfo.navy.mil ^
| Edward C. Whitman
Posted on 11/13/2003 12:00:01 AM PST by SAMWolf
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 101-115 next last
Convinced that all the surviving Marines were on board, the two boats departed for the long return to Pearl Harbor. The thirty men who did not make it back were all assumed to have been killed in action. One of these, Sergeant Clyde Thomason, was the first enlisted Marine to be awarded the Medal of Honor in World War II.
Only after the war would the Marine Corps discover that nine of the missing raiders had been left alive on the island. These men had become separated from the main body at one point or another during the operation. With the assistance of the natives the group evaded capture for a time, but finally surrendered on 30 August. A few weeks later the Japanese beheaded them on the island of Kwajalein.

To an American public hungry for good news, the Makin raid was proclaimed a brilliant exploit by the Navy and Marine Corps, and many of the participants were highly decorated, among them Carlson, Roosevelt, and CDR John Haines, who received the Navy Cross. In retrospect, there is little evidence that the attack succeeded in Japanese how tenuously they held the Gilbert Islands, it led directly to subsequent reinforcements that exacted a terrible price from the Marines at Tarawa somewhat over a year later. As part of that same campaign, however, the U.S. Army's 165th Regimental Combat Team wrested Makin from the Japanese on 23 November 1943. Today, Makin Atoll is part of the island nation of Kiribati.
There are a number of other postscripts. Nautilus and Argonaut returned safely to Pearl Harbor, arriving on 25 and 26 August, respectively. Ultimately, Nautilus ended the war with 14 successful war patrols, including several in which she landed troops and supplies for operations similar to the Makin raid. Argonaut was less fortunate. Later in the year, her base of operations was transferred to Brisbane, Australia, and in late December, still under the command of Jack Pierce, she was diverted for a patrol near Bougainville in the northern Solomons. On 10 January 1943, Pierce attacked a heavily-escorted convoy of five freighters. The encounter was seen from a U.S. Army aircraft that happened to be overhead, and it ended tragically with Argonaut, apparently mortally wounded by depth charges, breaking the surface steeply and falling back again. She was lost with all hands.

Admiral Chester W. Nimitz pins Carlson's Second Navy Cross on him for the Makin Island raid. Carlson won his third Navy Cross for his successful campaign on Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands.
Despite Carlson's careful withdrawal, nine Marines were, in fact, left alive on Butaritari and captured by the Japanese. They were treated humanely at first and transferred to Kwajalein, with the intention of sending them on to Japan. However, after a murderous change of heart by the Japanese commander of the Marshall Islands, Vice Admiral Kose Abe, they were ceremoniously beheaded on 16 October, despite the objections of several of his officers. After the war, Admiral Abe was convicted of war crimes and hanged at Guam.
After an extensive search in 1998 and 1999 and an ensuing forensic investigation, the remains of 19 Marines killed on Butaritari Island were recovered, identified, and returned to the United States for burial just last year - nearly six decades after their being declared Missing in Action. An additional search effort will now attempt to find the remains of the nine Marines who were executed on Kwajalein, despite the fact that the island has been drastically transformed both by and since the war.

Nautilus returns to port
Carlson's Raiders fought again on Guadalcanal, where they operated behind enemy lines for 31 days in November and December 1942, apparently the longest such patrol in the Second World War. Carlson himself left the raiders in 1943 to become the Operations Officer of the 4th Marine Division and participated in the assaults on Tarawa, Kwajalein, and Saipan. He was severely wounded on Saipan dragging his radio operator from the line of fire, retired from the Marine Corps after the war, and died of heart trouble in May 1947. His successes on Makin and Guadalcanal and his seminal ideas on unconventional warfare have left a living legacy in the tradecraft and traditions of our Special Forces today. And the pioneering role of Nautilus and Argonaut in projecting power "...From the Sea" at Makin Atoll during 1942 was a clear forerunner of many of the expeditionary missions for which the U.S. Submarine Force is prepared even now.
1
posted on
11/13/2003 12:00:02 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
To: snippy_about_it; PhilDragoo; Johnny Gage; Victoria Delsoul; Darksheare; Valin; bentfeather; radu; ..
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETARY,
Arlington, Va. (August 17, 2001)
On this date in 1942, two companies of Marine Raiders attacked the Japanese on the Makin Atoll, and 30 of them didn't return.
Today, at Arlington National Cemetery, the Marine Corps paid its respects with a ceremony it had been waiting and hoping to give for 59 years.
When the Makin Raiders gave their lives, they proved that they were "always faithful to each other, always faithful to the Corps, and always faithful to their country," said the Commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. James L. Jones.
General Jones addressed a standing-room-only crowd of approximately 700 people in Ft. Myer Chapel during a service that preceded today's graveside ceremony.
"Marines of today draw inspiration from the 'Greatest Generation,'" Gen. Jones said. "We learn from their courage."
General Jones recounted how the raid lifted American morale early in the war and reassured everyone that America was ready and willing to take the fight to the enemy.
The "fog of war" was very much a factor during the raid. That's why 19 Marines disappeared for 57 years, nine Marines were captured and executed, and two Marines remain missing.
The remains of all of the Marines had seemed hopelessly lost, especially after an unsuccessful search in the late 1940s.

Marines overlook the flag-draped caskets holding the remains of 13 U.S. servicemen who died at Makin Atoll in 1942.
However, what Gen. Jones referred to as "the spirit of Semper Fidelis" is a two-way street. When U.S. Army technicians got a lead in 1999 on where island natives might have buried 19 of the bodies, it was only a matter of time before this group of missing Makin Raiders would get their belated homecoming. They had been faithful to the Corps, and the Corps would be faithful to them.
The Army's Central Identification Laboratory, with assistance from many other government agencies, conducted exhaustive identification procedures at Hickam Air Force Base in Hawaii. Finally, the checks were complete, and the time had come to show gratitude.
The families of six of the Marine Raiders elected to have private burials. The remains of the other 13 Raiders arrived for burial at Arlington National Cemetery on Thursday. A Marine Corps KC-130 transport plane flew the remains from Hawaii to Edwards Air Force Base in Maryland.

Body bearers from Marine Barracks 8th and I, Washington, D. C. raise the casket containing the group remains of the Makin Raiders above their heads before laying it to rest beside the other remains.
The Marine Band, more popularly known as "The President's Own," and a detachment of Marines from the Marine Barracks in Washington, D.C. participated in a ceremony on the tarmac.
"Thank God they're home," said Col. Joe Griffith, USMC (Ret.). Colonel Griffith is the oldest surviving participant of the Makin raid. He had just been promoted to captain at the time of the mission.
Colonel Evans Carlson was the architect behind the Marine Raider concept as well as the raid on Makin. His son, Evans Carlson, who retired as a Marine colonel, also attended Thursday's tarmac ceremony.
"I'm awfully glad to be here," Col. Carlson said. "For me, it's a very moving experience."
Colonel Carlson said his famous father would have been pleased as well. "Dad regretted every casualty, however they were caused, wherever they occurred," he said. "His feelings about this were extremely strong."

(Left to Right) Karen Carlson-Loving, daughter of Col. Evans Carlson, Jr. USMC (Ret.) and his wife Regina Carlson watch the C-130 carrying the remains of 13 Makin Raiders as it taxis down the runway. Carlson Jr. is the son of Col. Evans Carlson who held command of the Makin Raiders.
Friday's ceremony, which also featured the Marine Band and a detachment from the Marine Barracks, showcased the appreciation the Corps has for its fallen warriors.
A 21-gun salute climaxed the ceremony for these Marines:
Capt. Gerald P. Holtom, Palo Alto, Calif.;
Sgt. Clyde Thomason Atlanta, Ga.;
FM1 Vernon L. Castle, Stillwater, Okla.;
Cpl. Daniel A. Gaston, Galveston, Texas;
Cpl. Edward Maciejewski, Chicago, Ill.;
Cpl. Robert B. Pearson, Lafayette, Calif.;
Pfc. William A. Gallagher, Wyandotte, Mich.;
Pfc. Kenneth M. Montgomery, Eden, Wis.;
Pfc. John E. Vandenberg, Kenosha, Wis.;
Pvt. Carlyle O. Larson, Glenwood, Minn.;
Pvt. Robert B. Maulding, Vista, Calif.;
Pvt. Franklin M. Nodland, Marshalltown, Iowa;
Pvt. Charles A. Selby, Ontonagon, Mich.
Sergeant Thomason distinguished himself during the raid as the first enlisted Marine to earn the Medal of Honor in World War II.
Melvin D. Heckt, the president of the United States Marine Raider Association, had these words for the Raiders lost during the attack: "We salute you, comrades. We salute you as Raiders, as Marines, as Americans, as men."
Additional Sources: www.csp.navy.mil
www.cilhi.army.mil
www.janeresture.com
www.usmc.mil
starbulletin.com
www.history.navy.mil
www.ibiblio.org
2
posted on
11/13/2003 12:02:04 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: All
The raid itself had mixed results. Reports painted it as a great victory and it boosted morale on the home front. Many believed it achieved its original goal of diverting forces from Guadalcanal, but the Japanese had immediately guessed the size and purpose of the operation and had not let it alter their plans for the Solomons. However, it did cause the enemy to worry about the potential for other such raids on rear area installations. On the negative side, that threat may have played a part in the subsequent Japanese decision to fortify heavily places like Tarawa Atoll, the scene of a costly amphibious assault later in the war . At the tactical level, the 2d Raiders had proven themselves in direct combat with the enemy. Their greatest difficulties had involved rough seas and poor equipment; bravery could not fix those limitations. Despite the trumpeted success of the operation, the Navy never again attempted to use submarines to conduct raids behind enemy lines. |
3
posted on
11/13/2003 12:02:24 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: All

Veterans for Constitution Restoration is a non-profit, non-partisan educational and grassroots activist organization. The primary area of concern to all VetsCoR members is that our national and local educational systems fall short in teaching students and all American citizens the history and underlying principles on which our Constitutional republic-based system of self-government was founded. VetsCoR members are also very concerned that the Federal government long ago over-stepped its limited authority as clearly specified in the United States Constitution, as well as the Founding Fathers' supporting letters, essays, and other public documents.
Tribute to a Generation - The memorial will be dedicated on Saturday, May 29, 2004.

Actively seeking volunteers to provide this valuable service to Veterans and their families.
4
posted on
11/13/2003 12:03:25 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: SAMWolf

Today's classic warship, USS South Carolina (BB-26), America's first dreadnought.
South Carolina class dreadnought battleship
displacement. 16,000 t.
length. 452' 9"
beam. 80' 2 1/2"
draft. 24' 6"
speed. 18 k.
complement. 751
armament. 8 12", 22 3", 2 3-pdr., 2 21" tt.
The USS South Carolina was designed before the HMS Dreadnought, however the Dreadnought was completed and comissioned first, thereby giving her name to all of the all big gun battleships that followed her. (If the South Carolina had been completed first, would all subsequent big gun battleships have been called South Carolinas?)
The USS South Carolina (Battleship No. 26) was laid down on 18 December 1906 at Philadelphia by William Cramp & sons; launched on 1 July 1908; sponsored by Miss Frederica Ansel; and commissioned on 1 March 1910, Capt. Augustus F. Fechteler, in command.
South Carolina departed Philadelphia on 6 March for shakedown, cruised to the Danish West Indies and Cuba, and then visited Charleston, S.C., from 10 to 15 April. After conducting trials off the Virginia Capes and off Provincetown, Mass., the dreadnought visited New York City on 17 and 18 June on the occasion of a reception for former President Theodore Roosevelt. Voyage repairs at Norfolk, naval militia training duty, and Atlantic Fleet maneuvers off Provincetown and the Virginia Capes occupied her time from the end of June until the beginning of November. Between 1 November 1910 and 12 January 1911, she voyaged to Europe and back with the 2d Battleship Division. This visit took her to Cherbourg, France, and Portland, England. Upon her return to No rfolk, she entered the navy yard for repairs, and then conducted tactics training and maneuvers off the New England coast.
Following a short visit to New York, she steamed east with the 2d Battleship Division for a visit to Copenhagen, Denmark; Stockholm, Sweden; and Kronstadt, Russia. During the return from Kronstadt, she reached Kiel Germany on 21 June in time to join in the Kiel Yachting Week, hosted by Kaiser Wilhelm II. On 13 July 1911, she arrived off Provincetown, Mass., and engaged in battle practice along the coast to the Chesapeake Bay.
Late in 1911, she took part in the naval review at New York and maneuvers with the 1st Squadron out of Newport, R.I. On 3 January 1912, she departed New York for winter operations in the vicinity of Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. South Carolina returned to Norfolk on 13 March and, until late June, cruised the east coast as far north as Newport. In June, she joined in the welcome receptions at Hampton Roads and New York given in honor of the visiting German Squadron, comprised of battle cruiser Moltke and two small cruisers, Bremen and Stettin. On 30 June, she entered the yard at Norfolk for overhaul.
Just over three months later, she sailed to New York for a four-day visit, from 11 to 15 October. Next came a month of exercises off the coast of New England and the Virginia Capes. From mid-November until mid-December, South Carolina steamed with the Special Service Division on visits to Pensacola, New Orleans, Galveston, and the Mexican port, Vera Cruz. She returned to Norfolk on 20 December and remained there until 6 January 1918, when she sailed to Colon, Panama, where her crew saw the newly-completed canal. After maneuvers in the area of Guantanamo Bay, she reentered Norfolk on 22 March; then cruised north as far as Newport, stopping at New York from 28 to 81 May for the dedication of a memorial to the battleship Maine.
After a brief period training midshipmen in the Virginia Capes area, South Carolina embarked upon a 16-month period during which she carried the "Big Stick" to the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. From late June until mid-September 1913, she cruised the eastern coast of Mexico protecting American interests at Tampico and Vera Cruz. She was overhauled at Norfolk from late September 1913 until early January 1914, and then headed for maneuvers off Culebra Island.
On the 28th, the dreadnought landed marines at Port-au-Prince, Haiti, to guard the United States legation and to establish a field radio station during that period of political convulsions. She departed Port-au-Prince on 14 April after the restoration of some order under General Orestes Zamar, the new Haitian President. She coaled at Key West, then steamed to Vera Cruz where she sent a landing force ashore to join in the occupation of that city until her departure a month later. South Carolina spent the troubled summer of 1914 investigating conditions in Santo Domingo and Haiti.
By the time she returned to Norfolk on 24 September, World War I had already been raging for almost two months. A little less than a month later, on 14 October, the dreadnought entered the yard at Philadelphia. She emerged revitalized on 20 February 1915 and headed south for the usual battle practice in the vicinity of Cuba. The exercises took on new meaning since they were held on the heels of the diplomatic crisis triggered by Germany's declaring the waters around England to be a war zone. However, cooler heads prevailed and not even the sinking of Lusitania could provoke the United States to belligerency. Accordingly, for almost two years, South Carolina continued her routine of winter and spring exercises out of Guantanamo Bay, summer operations off Newport, and periodic repairs at Philadelphia.
The entry of the United States into the war on the side of the Allies in April 1917 did not presage dramatic events for the Navy. Except for U-boats and an occasional disguised commerce raider, the Royal Navy had already cleared the seas of German naval might at such battles as Jutland and the Falkland Islands. Therefore, South Carolina continued to operate along the east coast through 1917 and for the first eight months of 1918.
On 9 September 1918, she joined the escort of a convoy bound for France. A week later, she turned the convoy over to other escorts in mid-ocean and steamed back to the United States. After a brief repair period at Philadelphia, she returned to gunnery training service and was so employed at the time of the Armistice, 11 November 1918.
From mid-February until late July 1919, South Carolina made four round-trip voyages between the United States and Brest, France. By 26 July, when she entered Hampton Roads at the end of the last of these voyages, she had returned over 4,000 World War I veterans to the United States. Following an overhaul at the Norfolk Navy Yard, she embarked midshipmen at Annapolis for a cruise to the Pacific. She departed Annapolis on 5 June 1920, transited the Panama Canal, sailed to Hawaii, and then to the west coast. She visited Seattle, San Francisco, and San Diego as she sailed down the western seaboard. South Carolina cleared San Diego on 11 August, retransited the canal, and sailed for Annapolis on 2 September; then she headed on to Philadelphia, where she remain ed for seven months.
In early April of 1921, she cruised to Culebra Island in the West Indies for training, and then operated in the Chesapeake Bay. On 29 May, the dreadnought embarked another complement of midshipmen at Annapolis. She called at Christiana, Norway, and Lisbon, Portugal, before heading to the Guantanamo Bay area to round out the midshipmen's summer training cruise. She debarked the midshipmen at Annapolis on 30 August and steamed to Philadelphia where she arrived the following day. South Carolina was decommissioned at Philadelphia on 15 December 1921 and remained there until her name was struck from the Navy list on 10 November 1923. Her hulk was sold for scrap on 24 April 1924 in accordance with the terms of the Five-Power Naval Treaty of Washington.
5
posted on
11/13/2003 3:17:01 AM PST
by
aomagrat
(IYAOYAS)
To: SAMWolf; All
Memorial erected in Thailand to U.S. 'Flying Tiger' aviators -AP Breaking NewsDANIEL LOVERING, Associated Press Writer (11-13) 03:27 PST BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- A memorial has been erected in northern Thailand to the Flying Tigers -- a group of volunteer U.S. pilots who attacked Japanese bases in Thailand during World War II, a U.S. official said T...
6
posted on
11/13/2003 4:45:53 AM PST
by
Oldeconomybuyer
(The democRATS are near the tipping point.)
To: SAMWolf
On This Day In History
354 St Augustine of Hippo Numidia, Algeria, convert/Christian philosopher
1312 Edward III king of England (1327-77)
1792 Edward John Trelawney England, traveler/author (Adv of Younger Son)
1831 James Maxwell Edinburgh Scot, physicist (Treatise on Electricity)
1833 Edwin Thomas Booth US, US Hall of Fame/actor (Hamlet)
1838 Joseph F Smith 6th President of Mormon church
1850 Robert Louis Stevenson Scotland, author (Treasure Island)
1854 George Whitefield Chadwick Lowell MA, composer (Judi Van Winke)
1856 Louis D Brandeis Massachusetts, Supreme Court Justice (1916-39)
1882 John Lowry Mount Vernon NY, NYC builder (Radio City Music Hall)
1898 Earl Sande jockey (Hall of Famer)
1906 Conrad Thibault Northbridge MA, singer (Jacques Fray Music Room)
1906 Hermione Baddeley England, actress (Camp Runamuck, Maude, Good Life)
1915 Howard Cooke Jamaica, (1991 Mico Gold Medal Award)
1916 Jack Elam Miami AZ, actor (The Dakotas, East Street, Rio Lobo)
1917 Robert Sterling Newcastle PA, actor (George Kirby-Adv of Topper)
1922 Jack Narz Louisville KY, TV gameshow host (Dotto, Video Village)
1922 Madeleine Sherwood Montreal, actress (Mother Superior-Flying Nun)
1922 Oskar Werner film actor/director (Shoes of the Fisherman, Das Ekel)
1923 Linda Christian Tampico, Mexico, actress (Athena, VIPs, Battle Zone)
1930 Fred Harris (Sen-D-Oklahoma)
1932 Olga Fikotova Czech, discus thrower (Olympic-gold-1956)
1932 Richard Mulligan Bronx NY, actor (Soap, Empty's Nest, Big Bus)
1933 Adrienne Corri Glasgow Scotland, actress (River, Dr Zhivago)
1938 Jean Seberg Marshaltown Iowa, actress (Breathless, Paint Your Wagon)
1941 Dack Rambo Delano CA, actor (Guns of Will Sonnett, Dallas)
1941 Mel Stottlemyre Wash, pitcher (NY Yankee)/pitching coach (NY Met)
1942 Beth Brickell Camden Arkansas, actress (Gentle Ben)
1943 John Paul Hammond NYC, blues singer (So Many Roads)
1947 Joe Mantegna Chicago IL, actor (House of Games, Weeds)
1948 Sheila Frazier NYC, actress (Gloria-Lazarus Syndrome)
1949 Terry Reid guitarist (River, Bang Bang You're Terry Reid)
1949 Whoopi Goldberg [Caryn Johnson], NYC, actress (Color Purple, Burglar)
1953 Tracy Scoggins Galveston TX, actress (Colbys, Gumshoe Kid)
1963 Vinny Testaverde (football: Baltimore Ravens, Cleveland Browns, NY Jets, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: quarterback; Heisman Trophy winner: University of Miami [1986])
1971 John Francis Zingg Boston MA, rocker (4 Fun-Unbelievable Fun Boys)
1972 Shom-Rock rocker (Young Nation)
1972 T-Haxx rocker (DYC)
Deaths which occurred on November 13:
867 St Nicholas I (the Great) pope (858-67), dies
1460 Henry the Navigator prince of Portugal, dies at 66
1687 Nell [Eleanor] Gwyn, mistress of Charles II of England, dies at 37
1770 George Grenville, British premier (1763-65)/Stamp Act, dies at 58
1779 Thomas Chippendale, English furniture maker, dies at 61
1829 Sam Patch loses his life in a 125' dive into Genesse Falls
1868 Gioacchino (Antonio) Rossini composer (Barber of Seville), dies at 76
1961 Wally Brown actor (Jed Fame-Cimarron City), dies at 57
1974 Karen Silkwood killed in a car crash under suspicious circumstances
1983 "Alvin" Junior Samples country singer (Hee Haw), dies at 56
1984 Dorothy Arnold actress, dies at 66
Reported: MISSING in ACTION
1964 BLOOM DARL R.---MORRISDALE PA.
[AIR COLLISION NO PARA SEEN]
1965 JENKINS HARRY T.WASHINGTON DC.
[02/12/73 RELEASED BY DRV, DECEASED
1968 ERSKINE JACK D.
[VC SKETCHES OF ERSKINE FOUND]
1969 RAY RONALD E.---PORT ARTHUR TX.
1970 BANCROFT WILLIAM W.---INDIANAPOLIS IN.
1970 WRIGHT DAVID I.---ANNAPOLIS MD.
POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.
On this day...
867 St Nicholas I ends his reign as Catholic Pope
1002 English king Ethelred II launches massacre of Danish settlers
1474 In the Swiss-Burgundian Wars, Swiss infantry shatters the army of Charles the Bold at Hericourt near Belfort, countering his march to Lorraine.
1775 American Revolutionary forces capture Montreal
1789 Ben Franklin writes "Nothing . . . certain but death & taxes"
1830 Oliver Wendell Holmes publishes "Old Ironsides"
1839 1st US anti-slavery party, Liberty Party, convenes in NY
1835 Texans officially proclaim independence from Mexico, and calls itself the Lone Star Republic, after its flag, until its admission to the Union in 1845
1843 Mt Rainier in Washington State erupts
1849 Peter Burnett elected 1st governor of California
1854 "New Era" sinks off NJ coast with loss of 300
1865 PT Barnum's New American museum opens in Bridgeport
1865 US issues 1st gold certificates
1868 American Philological Association organized in NY
1875 Harvard-Yale game is 1st college football contest with uniforms
1875 National Bowling Association organized in NYC
1878 New Mexico Governor Lew Wallace offers amnesty to many participants of the Lincoln County War, but not to gunfighter Billy the Kid. Billy the Kid's Great Escape.
1895 1st shipment of canned pineapple from Hawaii
1900 Baltimore Orioles (now NY Yankees) enter baseball's American League
1907 French cyclist Paul Cornu flies a twin rotor helicopter
1909 259 miners die in a fire at St Paul Mine at Cherry Ill
1914 The brassiere, invented by Caresse Crosby, is patented
1921 "The Sheik," starring Rudolph Valentino, is released
1921 US, France, Japan & British Empire sign a Pacific Treaty
1927 NY-NJ Holland Tunnel, 1st twin-tube underwater auto tunnel, opens
1931 Hattie Caraway (D-AK) appointed 1st US woman senator
1933 1st modern sit-down strike, Hormel meat packers, Austin, MN
1937 NBC forms 1st full-sized symphony orchestra exclusively for radio
1940 Walt Disney's "Fantasia" released
1940 U.S. Supreme Court rules in Hansberry v. Lee that African Americans cannot be barred from white neighborhoods.
1941 A German U-boat, the U-81 torpedoes Great Britain's premier aircraft carrier, the HMS Ark Royal. The ship sinks the next day.
1942 Minimum draft age lowered from 21 to 18
1946 1st artificial snow produced from a natural cloud, Mt Greylock, MA
1955 1st live telecast from non-contiguous foreign country-Havana Cuba
1956 Supreme Court strikes down segregation of races on public buses
1960 Fire in movie theater kills 152 children (Amude Spain)
1960 Sammy Davis Jr marries Swedish actress May Britt
1964 Bob Petit (St Louis Hawks) becomes 1st NBAer to score 20,000 points
1965 "Yarmouth Castle" burns & sinks off Bahamas, killing 89
1967 Carl B Stokes sworn-in as 1st major city black mayor (Cleveland Oh)
1969 VP Spiro T Agnew accused network TV news depths of bias & distortion
1970 Cyclone kills estimated 300,000 in Chittagong Bangladesh
1970 Lt Gen Hafez al-Assad becomes PM of Syria following military coup
1970 VP Spiro Agnew calls TV executives "impudent snobs"
1971 Mariner 9, 1st to orbit another planet (Mars)
1973 Oakland A's Reggie Jackson wins AL MVP unanimously
1977 25th Islander shut-out Resch 6-0 Gilles scores on 5th penalty shot
1978 NASA launches HEAO
1979 Ronald Reagan in NY announces his candidacy for President
1981 Ringo releases "Wrack My Brains"
1982 Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim fatally injured when KOed by Ray Mancini
1982 Vietnam War Memorial dedicated in Washington DC
1985 Dwight Gooden, youngest 20 game winner, wins Cy Young award
1985 Nevado del Ruiz volcano erupts in Colombia, kills 25,000
1986 US violates Iran arms boycott
1986 NASA launches space vehicle S-199
1989 Paul McCartney releases "Figure of 8" & Ou Est Le Soleil"
2000 Lawyers for George W. Bush failed to win a court order barring manual recounts of ballots in Florida. Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris announced she would end the recounting at 5 p.m. the next day - prompting an immediate appeal by lawyers for Al Gore.
Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"
Grenada, New Zealand : Rememberance Day
Laos : King's Birthday
West Germany : Repentance Day (Wednesday)
England : Lord Mayor's Day (Saturday)
US : Winter Weather Awareness Day
Peanut Butter Lover's Month
Religious Observances
RC : Commemoration of St Didacus, confessor
RC-US : Memorial of St Frances Xavier Cabrini, virgin, (1850-1917)
Religious History
0354 Birth of St. Augustine of Hippo, greatest of the Early Latin Church Fathers. Of his many writings, two have endured: "Confessions" describes the circumstances leading to his conversion to the Christian faith, and "The City of God" was written as a Christian view of the sacking of Rome by the Visigoths in the year 410.
1564 Pius IV ordered his bishops and scholars to subscribe to "Professio Fidei," the Profession of the Tridentine Faith recently formulated at the Council of Trent (1545_63) as the new and final definition of the Roman Catholic faith.
1618 In the Dutch commune of Dordrecht, the Synod of Dort convened to discuss the Arminian controversy vexing the Reformed faith. In the end, about 200 Arminian (Remonstrant) ministers were deposed and fifteen were placed under arrest and later expelled from the country.
1804 Anglican missionary to Persia, Henry Martyn wrote in his journal: 'God and eternal things are my only pleasure.'
1962 The name of St. Joseph was added to the canon of the Roman Catholic mass. It constituted the first alteration made to this canon since the seventh century.
Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.
Additional information supplied by the author. Contact via E-mail: William D. Blake. (
pilgrimwb@aol.com)
Thought for the day :
"The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance -- it is the illusion of knowledge."
Question of the day...
When sign makers go on strike, is anything written on their signs?
Murphys Law of the day...
All things are possible except skiing through a revolving door.
WOW I never knew...
Camel's milk does not curdle.
7
posted on
11/13/2003 6:52:30 AM PST
by
Valin
(We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
To: carton253; Matthew Paul; mark502inf; Skylight; The Mayor; Prof Engineer; PsyOp; Samwise; ...

FALL IN to the FReeper Foxhole!

Good Morning Everyone
If you would like added to our ping list let us know.
8
posted on
11/13/2003 6:54:59 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: SAMWolf; All
GOOD MORNING EVERYBODY!
9
posted on
11/13/2003 6:56:32 AM PST
by
Pippin
(GORE THE BORE)
To: snippy_about_it; All
Good morning Snippy.
Snippy is having cable problems this morning.
10
posted on
11/13/2003 6:56:34 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: aomagrat
Somehow the "age of the South Carolinas" just doesn't have the same...ring to it as the "age of the Dreadnoughts".
11
posted on
11/13/2003 6:57:13 AM PST
by
Valin
(We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
To: SAMWolf
Present!
12
posted on
11/13/2003 6:59:25 AM PST
by
manna
To: aomagrat
Morning aomagrat. I wonder what the total number of BB's we scrapped due to the Naval Treaties were.
13
posted on
11/13/2003 7:01:30 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: Oldeconomybuyer
Thanks for the link to the Flying Tiger story.
14
posted on
11/13/2003 7:04:59 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; radu; Darksheare; All
Good morning everyone!!
To: SAMWolf; snippy_about_it
Mornin', all!
Hope this finds you well. Sam, another fine job this morning, sir.
16
posted on
11/13/2003 7:10:38 AM PST
by
Colonel_Flagg
("History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it." - Sir Winston Churchill)
To: SAMWolf
Mornin' SAM. Thought I would duck into the Foxhole for a moment or two. I was just listening to some archive music on the net from WSM in Nashville and heard Darrly Worley's
"Have You Forgotten" and thought I would post a link here for the song. Even though I have one son over there it is still easy to forget the primary reason we are carrying on this war. It's a good song to listen to every once in a while.
You guys a doing a great service by carrying on this thread, I salute you.

SCOUTS OUT!
17
posted on
11/13/2003 7:14:12 AM PST
by
ladtx
( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
To: Valin
1941 A German U-boat, the U-81 torpedoes Great Britain's premier aircraft carrier, the HMS Ark Royal. The ship sinks the next day. 
18
posted on
11/13/2003 7:14:42 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: Pippin
Good Morning Pippin!
19
posted on
11/13/2003 7:15:05 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
To: manna
Hi Manna!
20
posted on
11/13/2003 7:15:49 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(Great leaders resolve conflicts with words. Words like Carpet Bombing, Cruise Missle & Daisy Cutter)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-80 ... 101-115 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson